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Bob Zmuda talks about the Andy Kaufman/Jerry Lawler story.....

Andy's comedy was well-known throughout the world, but many wrestling fans vividly remember his legendary feud with WWE Hall Of Famer, Jerry "The King" Lawler, and many say that helped was the first crossover of wrestling & Hollywood. "A lot of times I'm asked 'How did this start with Andy & the wrestling? This goes back years ago, when was a little boy...He lived in New Jersey, and his grandma Pearl would take him to New York City. And instead of taking him to a Broadway show, she would take him to Madison Square Garden to watch the wrestlers. So to Andy, this was the theatrical experience in his life & everything in his career, people would go 'is he crazy?' & 'What's this all about?' It all goes back to the squared circle when he was a boy."

With WWE's Monday Night RAW having Guest Hosts every week, Andy was the first of his kind to bring entertainment into the squared circle. With Vince McMahon coining the phase "sports entertainment," Kaufman was indeed doing that long before World Wrestling Entertainment came to such global prominence. "Andy used to speak to Vince in the early days & tried to convince to get more involved in this (his feud with Lawler). I guess Vince was protective of what he was trying to build at the time, so it never really came together."

Andy's feud with "The King" went down as one the most-entertaining & media attention-getting feuds arguably of all-time, between the matches they had all the way to their appearance on "Late Night With David Letterman." Bob explained how it all started. "Lawler had his promoter call Andy's manager (George Shapiro), and asked him how Andy would feel wrestling a man: Jerry "The King" Lawler in Memphis. George of course said no, but he asked Andy, and when Andy heard that, forget the Academy Award, this was it...This is his dream. George called back, and he said Andy wants to do it. This is where it gets insane." He went onto say how Andy would begin insulting the Southern p eople of Memphis & began to rile out the crowds down there, and the rest of the country took notice.

After insulting the good people of Memphis, Lawler did not take kindly to Kaufman, simply because he thought Kaufman was not taking it seriously & disrespecting the sport. "George calls the promoter & tells him 'We're not doing this...This is not what we thought.' The promoter said that they were sold-out, and if Andy Kaufman doesn't do this match, he has to write a check for $40,000. It was decided that if Andy could stay in the ring with Lawler for two minutes, that would be it. The night comes, and the only way we get from the dressing room to the ring was with a Memphis SWAT team of ten guys in full SWAT gear to take us down the aisle. It was the scariest situation I have ever been (a part of) in my life."

Bob told the story of the match between the two combatants & how Andy was hurt after two piledrivers from Lawler, who double-crossed Kaufman & performed the moves on Andy. He has seen Jerry since the incident & Andy Kaufman's death and actually talked to him about the incident. "I know the move, I did push it, and I knew Andy wasn't going to get seriously hurt. But Andy kinda straightened his head at the end, which he shouldn't have done, and he felt bad about it. But it was the greed of Jerry Lawler, I don't think anyone would know who hell Jerry Lawler was if it wasn't for that incident. Then we did 'Man On The Moon,' and we had to change it around, because he wanted to look like the good guy...so don't believe any of the crap in that."

A member of The Mayhem Nation from Cincinnati, OH asked that what kind of impact did Jerry "The King" Lawler have on Andy Kaufman's worldwide perspective? Bob was forthright in his response, despite feeling some animosity towards Lawler after the piledriver incident. "Huge, the effect of Jerry Lawler stepping forward & taking this to a whole new level by getting into the Kaufman thing & vice-versa. Kaufman bringing that to 'Saturday Night Live' & David Letterman...areas whe re you would never see this stuff was definitely big". Bob did add that things were not settled between him & Lawler. "One of these days you never know. I know one thing that Tony Clifton (the legendary lounge singer & whom many have classified for years as Andy's "alter ego") would like to settle the score with Jerry Lawler. And I mean a real match between Tony Clifton & Jerry 'The King' Lawler."


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